Mind A journey to the heart of being human

Daniel J. Siegel, 1957-

Book - 2017

"What is the mind? What is the experience of the self truly made of? How does the mind differ from the brain? Though the mind's contents--its emotions, thoughts, and memories--are often described, the essence of mind is rarely, if ever, defined. In this book, noted neuropsychiatrist and New York Times best-selling author Daniel J. Siegel, MD, uses his characteristic sensitivity and interdisciplinary background to offer a definition of the mind that illuminates the how, what, when, where, and even why of who we are, of what the mind is, and what the mind's self has the potential to become. MIND takes the reader on a deep personal and scientific journey into consciousness, subjective experience, and information processing, unc...overing the mind's self-organizational properties that emerge from both the body and the relationships we have with one another, and with the world around us. While making a wide range of sciences accessible and exciting--from neurobiology to quantum physics, anthropology to psychology--this book offers an experience that addresses some of our most pressing personal and global questions about identity, connection, and the cultivation of well-being in our lives,"--Amazon.com.

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Subjects
Published
New York : W.W. Norton & Company [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Daniel J. Siegel, 1957- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xiii, 378 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 333-344) and index.
ISBN
9780393710533
  • 1. Welcome
  • The Mind's Curiosity About Itself
  • A Common View: The Mind Is What the Brain Does
  • Our Identity and the Internal and Relational Origin of Mind
  • Why this Book About the Mind?
  • An Invitation
  • The Approach of Our Journey
  • Words Reflecting on Reflecting Words
  • 2. What Is the Mind?
  • Working on a Working Definition of Mind (1990-1995)
  • The System of Mind: Complex Systems, Emergence, and Causality
  • Reflections and Invitations: Self-Organization of Energy and Information Flow
  • 3. How Does the Mind Work in Ease and Dis-Ease?
  • Self-Organization, Lost and Found (1995-2000)
  • Differentiation and Linkage: The Integration of Healthy Minds
  • Reflections and Invitations: Integration and Well-Being?
  • 4. Is the Mind's Subjective Reality Real?
  • Adapting to a Medical World that had Lost Its Mind (1980-1985)
  • Mind sight in Health and Healing
  • Reflections and Invitations: The Centrality of Subjectivity
  • 5. Who Are We?
  • Exploring the Layers of Experience Beneath Identity (1975-1980)
  • Top-Down and Bottom-Up
  • Reflections and Invitations; Identity, Self, and Mind
  • 6. Where Is Mind?
  • Could Mind Be Distributed Beyond the Individual? (1983-1990)
  • Neuroplasticity and Cultural Systems
  • Reflections and Invitations; Within and Between
  • 7. A Why of Mind?
  • Meaning and Mind, Science and Spirituality (2000-2005)
  • Integration as the "Purpose of Life?"
  • Reflections and Invitations; Purpose and Meaning
  • 8. When Is Mind?
  • Exploring Presence in Mind and Moment (2005-2010)
  • Attunement, Integration, and Time
  • Reflections and Imitations; Awareness and Time
  • 9. A Continuum Connecting Consciousness, Cognition, and Community?
  • Integrating Consciousness, Illuminating Mind (2010-2015)
  • Consciousness, Non-Consciousness, and Presence
  • Reflections and Invitations: Cultivating Presence
  • 10. Humankind: Can We Be Both?
  • Being, Doing, and Integrating Mind (2015-eternal present)
  • The Systems of a Plural Self and Integration of Identity
  • Reflections and Invitations: MWe, an Integrating Self, and a Kind Mind
Review by Library Journal Review

Psychiatrist and prolific author Siegel (psychiatry, Univ. of California, Los Angeles Medical Sch.; Brainstorm) elucidates personhood and human relationships from the standpoint of neuroscience, discussing consciousness, cognition, and community from ancient philosophy to the latest in brain science. Among ten chapters are those on subjectivity, time, identity, and "ease and dis-ease." Siegel is thoughtful and stimulating: language "interconnects, illuminates and imprisons all at once, and we need to be and remain aware, as best we can, of this linkage, liberation and limitation words create in our lives." There are several helpful diagrams and illustrations. Mind is both embodied and relational: inner and inter. Topics include "energy and information flow," self-organization, and spirituality. Concluding chapters address consciousness, cognition, community, "plural self," and identity. Siegel distinguishes Newtonian and quantum mechanics: the latter lets us "view the world as filled not with absolutes, but possibilities and probabilities." The text is mostly accessible, sometimes overwrought. VERDICT This is a welcome overview of a field in flux, a progress report on the science and philosophy of who we are.-E. James Lieberman, George -Washington Univ. Sch. of Medicine, Washington, DC © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A clinical professor of psychology serves up the soft, squishy side of neuroscience.If you are a hard-drilling student of brain science, the mind is the ghost in the machine, some matter for Cartesian pondering, with a healthy dose of the uncertainty principle thrown in for good measure: for how can the thing doing the measuring be measured itself? Siegel (Psychiatry/UCLA School of Medicine; Brainstorm: The Power and Purpose of the Teenage Brain, 2014, etc.) is not that steely scholar. Instead, this treatise on the mind is a sometimes-elegant (skull and skin are not limiting boundaries of energy and information flow) but often seemingly nonrigorous look at what Woody Allen called his second favorite organ. Mind, by Siegels account, is indeed energy and information flow; it is embodied, inasmuch as it exists inside the brain, but it is also disembodied, inasmuch as it extends beyond the individual. Brain activity is energy flow, but somehow that energy flow yields a world of mental representations, of subjective mental experience. Subjective is a key word in the authors account, for, as he writes, he has long sought a way to connect empirical insights with emotional knowledge. This interest in the emotional, in the inner view of mental life, is largely what separates Siegel from the likes of Antonio Damasio, but allowing for off-putting neologisms such as MWeshorthand for our integrated identity, the linkage of a differentiated me with a differentiated weit is a side that has not received enough scholarly attention. These emotional aspects, manifested in matters such as grief, would seem to be real enough, though much neuroscience questions the reality of subjective experience; Siegel nods to that by noting, we can honor the universal reality that perception is a constructed skill. In other words, its more Pema Chodron than Petri dish. If you embrace the notion that humankind ought to embrace more kindness, a natural outcome of integration, then this is your book. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.